Cooperative Games, Trust Games, Initiative Activities



Cooperative Games, Trust Games, Initiative Activities

Instructor: Miss Michelle Ulmen

Central Washington University

Ellensburg, Washington 98926

e-mail: ulmenm@cwu.edu

Class Overview and Introduction:

The purpose of each of these activities is to help students develop team cooperation, trust, communication skills, and problem solving skills.  Throughout the activities the students will be enhancing their personal development and challenged as individuals to face their own perceived limitations.  Teamwork is developed by working, playing and accomplishing goals together.

Student Learning Objectives:

These activities are designed to meet the  Essential Academic Learning Requirements in Health and Fitness and in Communication 

After completing this unit, the student will:

Apply rules and safety procedures, practice sportsmanship and teamwork, and cooperatively participate in a variety of group and individual fitness activities.

Develop fundamental physical skills and progress to complex movement activities as physically able.

Develop the personal skills necessary to comfortably and enjoyably participate in cooperative activities.

Acquire skills to move safely.

Understand concepts of physical fitness.

Recognize patterns of growth and development.

Use listening and observation skills to gain understanding.

Use communication strategies and skills effectively to present ideas to others.

Analyze and reflect of ideas while paying attention and listening in a variety of situations.

Use a variety of effective listening strategies.

Encourage group members to offer ideas and points of view.

Respect that a solution may require honoring and other points of view.

Developmental Analysis

TC = Teamwork, Cooperation CL = Communication, Listening Skills T = Trust 

L = Leadership PS = Problem Solving SE = Self Esteem HA = Handicap Awareness

|Activity |TC |CL |T  |L  |PS |SE |HA |

The Great Communicator

Listening Skills and Practice Communication Skills

Group members need to practice speaking to one another so that they can clearly explain the ideas they wish to put into action.  Try having all groups try the Great Communicator at one time.  Space is not an issue.   Try this challenge early in your team building program.  As your groups develop (or struggle to develop), you may wish to repeat this challenge from time to time as a test of communication success.

Task

The group members sit either in a semicircle or randomly in an area assigned only to that group.  One member of the group is selected as the Great Communicator.

The Great Communicator attempts to describe a picture in teams that will allow the group members to draw the objects being described.  The Great Communicator may not, however, use certain terms describing standard shapes.  Terms such as circle, square, rectangle or triangle may not be used.  Also, group members may not ask the Great Communicator questions or request further descriptions.

Equipment

Pencil and Piece of Paper for each student

Picture for the Great Communicator to describe

Clipboard for Great Communicator

Possible Solutions

The solutions will vary according to the descriptive skills of the Great Communicator and the listening skills of the group members.  As the group displays their drawings and compares them to the Great Communicator's picture, they will get an indication of their success in listening and speaking.  As the group practices this challenge a few times, members should see an improvement in their communication efforts and skills.

Caution: Construction Zone

Communication Skills

Group members, using verbal clues and cues, will assist other group members (the construction workers), who will be wearing blindfolds, to assemble a large puzzle.  The challenge is not only for the blindfolded group members to complete the puzzle, but also for the sighted group members to communicate in a clear manner so that the construction workers can successfully follow the directions given to them. 

Task

Blindfold as many of the group members as you wish.  After blindfolding the designated construction workers, the sighted group members mix up the parts of the puzzle.  Although there is no end to the types of puzzles you or your students could create, we assume the puzzle you will use will become a square when assembled.

The sighted group member’s five verbal directions to the blindfolded construction workers.  The construction workers will need to be guided to the puzzle pieces and then be guided in assembling them.  The sighted groups are not allowed to touch the puzzle pieces or the blindfolded group members.

Make sure the working area is completely free of obstructions or other physical structures.

Equipment

1-4 blindfolds per group

Puzzle pieces (made from plywood or tag board)

    recommended that they are color coded

    see example puzzle

Rules: Only the blindfolded members may touch the puzzle pieces.  If sighted members physically touch puzzle pieces, the group must mix up the puzzle again and start from the beginning.

The Riverboat 

Team Cooperation, Trust and Problem Solving

Requires a group to transport themselves across a large open space.  There is one basic solution to this task, but it usually takes a group the better part of a class period to successfully complete the challenge.

Description

The team will transfer themselves from one area to the other without touching the ground with their bodies.  The group may use two folded tumbling mats (or pieces of plywood) to create a riverboat.  All members of the team and all equipment must make it to the other side.

Equipment

2 standard tumbling mats or pieces of plywood

two small tires

2 long jump ropes or pieces of rope

Rules

1.  If a group member touches the ground with any part of their body, the entire group must go back to the starting position.

2.  All equipment must be brought across the river.

3.  No one may call a teammate by his or her last name.

Skywriters

Communication, Team Cooperation, Trust and Problem Solving

Group members will attempt to build a series of shapes or patterns on a cargo net using the bodies of all the group members to form each figure.  Very physically challenging.

Task: Group members begin by standing under the cargo net.  All the members must climb onto the cargo net to form a shape.  After the shape is approved, all the group members must get off the cargo net before the next shape is constructed.  Using paper and pencils, the group can prepare a plan whereby each person is assigned a specific part of the designated shape.

Equipment: Cargo net, soft surface to crash on to (safety), shapes to be built (square, circle, triangle, +, etc.), paper and pencils

Rules

1.  All group members must be on the cargo net and off the floor when the shape is constructed.

2.  All group members must be on the same side of the net.

3.  All group members must get off the net before the next shape is constructed.

Toxic Waste Transfer

Requires the group to transport objects across an open space without directly touching the objects or their container.  The group will manipulate a bucket filled with small objects using ropes attached to the bucket.

Task: After forming a circle around the 5-gallon bucket and holding the ends of the ropes attached to the bucket.  The group will transport the bucket from one location to another.  When they reach the location, they will be required to transfer some of the contents of the bucket into the other container.  If something is spilled (toxic waste) then the team must choose a member of the team to dress in protective clothing, remove the contents, come back, remove the protective clothing, and then the team goes again.  Each time there is a spill, a new team member is the toxic waste expert.

Equipment: 5-gallon bucket (attach 10-12 ropes, 8 feet or more in length by drilling holes in the bucket), 5-gallon bucketto transfer material into and protective clothing

Rules

1.  If the toxic waster bucket touches the floor, the entire group must start over.

2.  Students without protective clothing may not touch the toxic waste.

3.  No last names or put-downs may be used.

Team-A-Pod

Members must physically assist and balance one another while traveling across a designated space.  The group will creatively sculpt with their bodies a large millipede-like creature that moves with only a limited number of body parts touching the ground.

Task: The team will move themselves across an area (about 30 feet) with collectively only five body parts in contact with the ground.  This challenge is set-up for a seven member team. The number of floor contact points can change depending on the number of team members.

Equipment: Cones to mark start and finish points, soft surface to go across (grass will work)

Rules

1.  If more than the number of specified contact points touches the floor, the entire team must return to the starting line.

2.  No last names or put-downs may be used.

Ship to Shore

A team is stranded on a sinking ship in the ocean.  The team members must devise a way to get back to shore before the ship goes down. 

Task: Group members will begin to travel with equipment on their stranded ship in the middle of the ocean.  All team members must travel from the ship to island 1 and stay on island 1 before advancing to island 2.  Teammates must stay at island 2 before traveling to shore.

Equipment: Places designated as shore and ship ways for students to get across ocean

Rules

1.  All group members must reach and remain on island 1 before anyone travels to island 2.

2.  All group members must reach and remain on island 2 before traveling to shore.

3.  Group members may not touch the water with any part of their bodies.

4.  If any rule is broken, the person who broke the rule plus a successful member must return to the ship and start over.

Grand Canyon II

Task: The group will transfer its members from cliff 1 to cliff 2.  They will attempt to swing across the open space between the cliffs and land safely on the second cliff.  Group members will need to assist one another both in swinging as well as safe landing.  The placement of the rope in relationship to cliff 1 will determine the difficulty level of this challenge.

Equipment: Climbing rope to swing (if you perform this outside, hang from a very sturdy tree), platforms for the students to swing on to.

To add difficulty: throw out balls for the students to grab while swinging.

Rules

1.  If a group member touches the floor, that person and one more successful person must return to cliff 1.

2.  If a group member falls off a cliff onto the floor, that person and one successful person must go back to cliff 1.

3.  No one may use last names or put-downs.

Arachnophobia

The challenge is for a group to work themselves through a horizontal spider web without touching any part of the web.  This is a difficult challenge that requires a great deal of physical help from teammates.

Task: All group members must travel from one end of the web to the other-without touching the web or any supports that hold the web.  Group members must travel over each web strand.  They are not to travel under the web.

Equipment: 2 high balance beams or other sturdy supports, 20 to 30 yards of elastic string or yarn and an area for the students to fall onto.

Rules

All group members must start at one end of the web.

2.  Team members must not touch any part of the web or any part of the supports.

3.  Group members must never travel under the web.

4.  If a rule is broken, the group must sacrifice the one who made the mistake plus one or more successful members as needed for assistance reentering the web.

Note:  All of the challenges mentioned above were taken from More Team Building Challenges. 

References

Midura, Daniel W. & Glover, Donald R.  (1995).  More Team Building Challenges.  Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.

Landy, Joanne M. & Landy, Maxwell J.  (1993).  Ready-To-Use P. E. Activities for Grades 7 - 9.  West Nyack, NY: Parker Publishing Co.

Wuest, Deborah & Lombardo, Bennet.  (1994).  Curriculum and Instruction:  The Secondary School Physical Education Experience.  St. Louis, MS: Mosby-Year Book, Inc.

Cooperative Games

 

COOPERATIVE GAMES/ACTIVITIES

BLIND SQUARE

Equipment: Length of rope, blindfolds for everyone. (Use neckerchiefs.) 

Concepts: Handicap awareness, teamwork, cooperation, communication

Objective: To form a geometric shape with a 50 foot loop of rope.

Task: Gather the group into a large circle, Place the loop of rope on the ground inside of the circle at the feet of all of the participants. Tell the group to blindfold themselves, then pick up the rope. When the group is ready tell them to form a perfect square with the rope. When they think they have succeeded, have them remove their blindfolds. 

Rules: Each participant must hold onto the rope with at least one hand at all times, blindfolds are to remain in place until they feel they have completed the figure. 

Questions: 1. What did the group think the purpose of this activity was? 

    2. How did being blind make you feel? 

    3. Ask them to describe what happened, how well did the person perform? Why? 

    4. How could the activity be improved? 

WEIGHT PULL

Equipment: Heavy weight (about 200 pounds), pulley, strong/large diameter rope, timer. 

Concepts: Teamwork, cooperation, leadership

Objective: To raise and lower a weight using a rope and pulley as often as possible in a given time. 

Task: A weight is attached to a rope running through a pulley or tackle. Each person in the group must hold the rope behind a set point and then raise and lower the weight as many times as possible in two minutes.

Rules: The weight may not be dropped from the top of the pulley, a safety area is drawn on the ground six feet around the weight and no one is allowed to enter it. 

Questions: 1. What was the purpose of this activity? 

     2. Were you doing more or less work than you thought you should? 

     3. Did the group arrange itself in any particular order? 

     4. How were they arranged? 

     5. What was physically hard about this activity? 

     6. What was mentally hard about this activity? 

     7. How well did your group do? 

     8. What could you do to improve? 

MINUTE MEASURE

Equipment: A watch with a second hand or a stopwatch. 

Concepts: Problem-solving, self-esteem

Objective: To develop an awareness of the duration of a minute and to practice estimating time spans.

Task: Ask the group to find a comfortable spot and sit down. Explain that they are going to estimate three minutes. Have them close their eyes and keep them closed. They begin timing on a signal from the instructor. At the end of one minute, each one should raise their hand with one finger up.  At the end of two minutes, they should raise another finger. At the end of three minutes, they should open their eyes and put down their hand. Everyone should remain silent until everyone is finished. 

Rules: Everyone keeps their eyes closed until they are finished timing, everyone remains silent until the end of the activity. 

Questions: 1. How did you estimate the time? 

     2. For those who finished first, how did you feel? 

     3. What did you learn about yourself? 

     4. Are there other ways we tell time? 

     5. What are ways people use to estimate time? 

     6. If you did it again, what would you do differently? 

     7. Did you care if you were close or not? 

     8. Would you like to do this again to see if you could improve? 

     9. Did the time spent waiting seem to take longer? 

DIMINISHING LOAD

Equipment: None

Concepts: Problem solving, teamwork, cooperation, trust

Objective: To move a group across an open field as quickly as possible.

Task: Instruct the group that they are to get across an open field as quickly as possible. To get across a person must be carried. 

Rules: The first person must return to be carried across, if someone being carried across touches the ground, both must return to be carried across. 

Questions: 1.How did the group decide to solve the problem? 

      2.Did anyone become the leader? 

      3.How did the leader emerge? 

      4.What things did you have to think about before you started? 

      5.How did you feel when things didn't go as well as you wanted? 

      6.How did you deal with the feelings? 

HEIGHT ALIGNMENT

Equipment:

Concepts: Communication, problem solving, handicap awareness

Objective: For the group to align themselves according to height.

Task: Instruct the group to blindfold themselves. When everyone is blindfolded, tell the group to arrange themselves in a line according to height without speaking. 

Rules: No one may talk during the activity, blindfolds must remain in place throughout the activity. 

Questions: 1. What bothered you about not being able to speak? 

    2. How did you communicate? 

    3. Who became a leader? 

    4. How did you decide to lead or follow? 

    5. How did you know where to fit into the line? 

    6. What did you learn from this activity? 

ORDER OUT OF CHAOS

Equipment: blindfolds

Concepts: Communication, problem solving, leadership, teamwork

Objective: Develop nonverbal communication in carrying out a task, try with blindfolds.

Task: The group is blindfolded. Each member is assigned a number. Once the numbers are given out, the members must line up in proper numerical order without talking. 

Rules: No talking is allowed, blindfolds should remain in place until the task is completed. 

Questions: 1. What do you think is the purpose of this activity? 

   2. What ways did you see to solve the problem? 

   3. How did you try to communicate this solution? 

   4. What examples can of not understanding what someone was trying to say? 

   5. How did you deal with any frustration? 

   6. What kind of leadership came out of the group?

7. What did you like about how the group made decisions?  

REACH FOR THE SKY

Equipment: Two inch masking tape or other marking material. 

Concepts: Teamwork, cooperation, communication 

Objective: To place a marker as high on an object (tree or wall) as possible. 

Task: Break the group into groups of five. The group is then to place a mark as high as possible on an object using resources of the group. 

Rules: The group may not use the object for climbing, only for placement. 

Questions: 1. What do you think was the purpose of the activity?

2. What was the best part?

3. What was the hardest part?

4. How did the group decide to proceed?

5. How well did you communicate with one another to solve the problem?

6. Did anything hamper communication? 

7. When did the group cooperate in completing the activity? 

8. How did cooperation lead to success in the activity? 

TRAFFIC JAM

Equipment: Space markers

Concepts: Leadership, decision making, communication

Objective: To have two groups, of at least three people each, exchange places on a line of spaces. 

Task: Have the two group’s line up facing each other on the spaces. There should be one more space than the number of participants and that space should be in the middle, separating the two groups.  The spaces should be one step apart.  The groups are now to switch positions on the line. A's should move to the right of the center space and the B's should end up on the left of the center space. They must do this by following these procedures: 

     1.Stepping off to an adjacent empty square, or 

     2.Stepping around a person facing the opposite way to an empty space. 

Rules: Persons cannot move backwards, persons may not step around someone facing in the same direction, two people may not move at once. 

Questions: 1.What was the purpose of this activity? 

     2.Did a leader emerge and how did he lead? 

     3.How well did the group do and why? 

     4.If you disagreed with the group, how did you deal with it? 

     5.What did you like about this activity? 

ALL ABOARD

Equipment: Stable two by two foot platform

Concepts: Problem Solving, teamwork, cooperation, trust.

Objective:. For an entire group to stand on a two by two foot platform without anyone touching the ground. 

Task: Everyone in a group must get off the ground and onto the platform. For groups of 10-15, a two by two foot platform is adequate. Use smaller or larger platforms accordingly. In order to be counted as on the platform, each participant must have both feet off the ground for five seconds. 

Rules:  Everyone must have both feet off the ground, simultaneously, for 5 to 10 seconds. 

Questions: 1. What was the purpose of this activity? 

   2. Did it seem simple at first? 

   3. How difficult was the activity? 

   4. What made the activity go well or not? 

   5. What things involved teamwork? 

   6. Did everyone want to cooperate? 

   7. What did you learn from this activity? 

   8. How did you decide what to do? 

ROLL PLAYING

Equipment: 1-3 or 4 balls, any kind and size

Concepts: working together, creating a rhythm

Objective: to move the ball around the circle as quickly as possible, from lap to lap without using the hands.

Task: All sit in a tight circle, touching your neighbor, with the legs extended toward the middle. Place a basketball on the lap of one person in the circle. Move the ball around the circle as quickly as possible, from lap to lap but you can not use your hands. Add a couple of signals like: reverse, go, slow motion. You may add more balls. Add a smaller ball (like a softball or tennis ball and eventually a golf ball or ping pong ball).

FOUR UP

Equipment: none

Concepts:: cooperation, focus on each other

Objective: to have exactly four people standing at all times

Task: Start with everyone sitting down. Anyone can stand up whenever they want to but you cannot remain standing for more than five seconds at a time before you sit down again. Then you can get right up again if you want to. The object is to have exactly four people standing up at all times. This game usually lasts about a minute, but what pandemonium and laughter is generated in that minute!

WHITEWATER CASCADE

Equipment: none

Concepts: trust, cooperation, communication

Objective: move a person along the "river on the laps of the seated people to the end.

Task: Form a long, double line, facing each other. Sit opposite, with feet straight out and next to the side of the other’s hips. Tighten up the total line so everyone is snug. The line can curve. This works better outside and on a gentle slope of a hill. Now, people enter the river by laying flat on their backs, head down river. The lines begin to move the person along the rapids, with hands underneath and with knees raised as necessary to move the person along. Reflect feelings at the end and then join the river at the end

COOKIE MACHINE

Equipment: none

Concepts: Cooperation, trust, communication

Objective: Successfully bring one person from one end of the oven to the other end of the oven.

Task: Form two lines that face each other, all standing shoulder to shoulder with elbows bent and forearm in front, palms up. The forearms should alternate, one player’s arm should each be flanked by the arms of players across from them. Everyone must bunch together very closely, with one foot forward and one foot back for balance. Now, a solidly built oven with a conveyer belt running down the middle has been built. Make sure all watches, rings and anything sharp are removed from the oven and glasses and belts from the cookie. The cookie stands at one end of the oven, announces what kind of cookie they want to be and slides them into the oven. The rest of the class are bakers and chant their cookie choice (Chocolate chip, chocolate chip ) as they bounce them along the conveyor belt, turning them over halfway through, until they pop out the other end, freshly baked. Make sure there are two strong bakers available to ease each cookie out of the oven. After the cookie is done they join the oven.

SLIPPED DISC

Equipment: Frisbee, plastic plate or metal cover

Concepts: cooperation, communication

Objective: Pass the Frisbee around the circle without using hands.

Task: Everyone forms a circle on hands and knees with heads facing inward. A Frisbee is placed in the middle of one person’s back. The object of the game is to pass the object around the circle, from back to back, without using hands. If the object falls, it is picked up by hand and placed on the back of the last person who had it. The game continues until the disc is passed successfully around the entire circle.

FOX AND SQUIRREL

Equipment: 2 balls alike, 1 ball that is different

Concepts: Passing skills, communication, thinking strategies

Objective: for the foxes to catch the squirrel by tagging whoever is holding the squirrel ball with one (or both) of the fox balls.

Task: Everyone stands in a circle and begins passing the fox balls from player to player. You may change directions but may only pass to the person next to you.  You may throw the squirrel across the circle. Call out Fox or Squirrel each time you pass one of the balls. You may also pass the squirrel to your neighbor.

GROUP JUGGLING

Equipment: 1 ball per person (5-8 in a group)

Concepts: Cooperation, tossing and catching skills.

Objective: To pass the ball to all participants once, eventually add a ball per person

Have everyone stand in a circle. First a pattern/throwing routine must be established. The first one throws the object to another person (not the one next to him/her). Then that person throws the object to another person. Once the pattern is made you must remember who you throw it to and who throws to you. The next step is to increase a ball with each pattern repetition.

LINE-UPS

Equipment: none

Concepts: cooperation, communication

Objective: line up by the way told, either communicating, non-verbal

Task: 1. Line up by age: non-verbally, verbally

2. Line up by height: non-verbally, time them

3. Do these tasks blindfolded

BODY SNATCHERS

Equipment: none (could use blindfolds)

Concept: Trust

Objective: Avoid being snatched by the Body Snatcher

Task: Choose one player as the evil invader from outer space and the rest go around with their eyes closed. The invading body snatcher gets to keep their eyes open.  They creep up to an unsuspecting citizen and make whatever blood-curdling sound they want and that person becomes a new body snatcher. The last one left gets to be the new body snatcher.

MINEFIELD

Equipment: Paper balls, socks, plastic balls or anything that resembles a ball, mousetraps!!!, blindfolds for each pair

Concept: Communication

Objective: Verbally guide the blindfolded person across the minefield in as little time as possible.

Task: Take the boundaries and spread out the mines. Find a partner and go to opposite sides of the minefield. One player is blindfolded and the other verbally tells them how to go through the field. If a mine is blown up (touched) a ten second time penalty is added to their final time. You can do this alone or the whole group together. It makes for better listening!

HAGOO

Equipment: none

Concept: fun

Objective: to travel across a distance without laughing/ to make someone from the other team laugh Hagoo means come here in Tlingit Indians of Alaska.

Task: Two teams face each other, about 3 feet apart. Two players, one for each team, who stand at the opposite ends of the lines are challengers. They step forward and face each other down the length of the gauntlet. With a bow and the invitation Hagoo, they walk towards each other, breaking neither their eye contact nor their reserve. In the middle, they pass and continue to the end, determined to suppress their smile. The rest of the players may engage in any form of facial movements or noises but no touching. If you make it the whole length then you stay with your team. If you smile or laugh you join the other team. You play until everyone has done it or there is only one team.

ROPE KNOTS

Equipment: Length of rope about forty to fifty feet long

Concepts: Communication, cooperation

Objective: For the group to untie the knots without letting go of the rope

Task: Tie three simple slip through knots at about the quarter, half and three-quarter points. Instruct people to take hold of the rope with one hand, making sure that there are 2,3,4 people along each quarter of the rope. The task is then to untie the knots without letting go of the rope.

COUNTDOWN

Equipment: none

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Collaboratively countdown to 0.

Task: Someone must start at the top of the numbers (if there are 10 in the group then the number is 10) and then someone else (not sitting next to that person) must say the next lower number. You must countdown to 1. Do not sit in a circle and there are no assigned numbers. The leader says countdown and someone starts with the highest number. If two people call the same number at the same time, the leader calls out Cancel the Launch, and they start over. If there is too long a pause in the countdown the leader can cancel the launch.

MOBIL TEE PEE

Equipment: Bell or gong, mats and stop watch

Concept: cooperation

Objective: Form a human tee pee in 120 seconds and move it

Task: Give the ten people 120 seconds to build a human tee pee using all ten people. Next task is for the group to move the human tee pee from one point to another without breaking the tee pee formation. Have spotters.

SQUARE FORM

Equipment: Ball of yarn, blindfolds

Concepts: Communication, cooperation

Objective: To form a circle while holding the yarn and blindfolded

Task: Have the players line up by their birthdays (month and date) starting with January. Put on a blindfold and give them the yarn and ask them to hold it and then as a group form a perfect circle. Take off the blindfolds when you think you have one.

THE SHRINKING SHIP

Equipment: 6-8 foot rope and stop watch

Concept: team building, cooperation

Objective: put everyone’s feet in the circle

Task: Make the perimeter of the circle large enough to guarantee success. Everyone’s feet must be inside of the circle in fifteen seconds. Once they have experienced success from the first round, ask them if they would be willing to make the circle smaller. Continue as long as the group is willing.

HOOP-DE-DOO

Equipment: Hula hoop, rope, ball and weight

Concepts: Tossing and catching skills, cooperation

Objective: toss the ball through the hoop and someone catches it.

Task: Hang a hoop and tie a weight at the bottom to steady it. Divide the group, with half going to opposite sides of the hoop. Have them toss the ball through the hoop and someone catch it on the other side. Do this until everyone has tossed and caught.  Now the leader winds up the hoop so that it begins to spin. Begin the tossing and catching again. After a person has done the task they go to the end of the line on the other side of the hoop.

WALK-A-HOOP

Equipment: two hula hoops

Concepts: cooperation, communication

Objective: group to walk across the space without dropping either hoop without using their hands.

Task: Use 6-9 people and divide them into 3 groups. The group at the center places their left leg inside one hula hoop, and right leg inside a second hoop. The side groups then connect to the opposite sides oh the hoops. The leader raises the hoops to knee level and tells them to put tension on it to hold it above the ground.  They then have to walk across the assigned space without dropping either hoop. If the group drops the hoop, then have them return to the starting point and start again.

HULA HOOP PASS

Equipment: Hula hoop

Concepts: Cooperation, communication

Objective: Get the hoop around the circle of hand held people without letting go of hands

Task: Form a circle and all join hands. Put the hoop on the grasped hands of two players. See how fast you can pass the hoop around the people in the circle without letting go of hands. You can add another hoop and make it go the other way.

TEAM ACROSS

Equipment: none

Objective: cooperation, communication

Object: Team must move across the field as quickly as possible.

Task: A minimum of one team members’ entire body must be off the ground at all times. The entire group must be connected at all times. No one is allowed to run. If the person or persons being carried touch the ground at all or team members become disconnected then the entire team is disqualified. Works best in large groups of 15-20

CROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE

Equipment: none except boundary lines

Concept: communication, cooperation

Objective: To cross the area without becoming detached.

Task: Players line up with sides of feet touching. Group has an area which everyone must get around or across without feet becoming detached. If their feet become detached, the group must begin again.

RING CROSS

Equipment: Carpet squares for everyone, boundary lines

Concepts: Cooperation, communication

Objective: Line up by birthday and reverse the order by stepping on carpet squares.

Task: Each member gets one square. They may not touch the ground. The squares may not touch each other. Have the group line up by the order of their birthdays.  They are to cross the area so they land on the other side in the reverse order. In crossing they may only step on the squares and the squares must not touch each other or they start over again. You may step on someone else’s square.

 

BODY PARTS MOVING

Equipment: record : Hap Palmer, Movin,

Concepts: Enhance body and spatial awareness, cooperation

Objective: In groups of three move through space attempting to follow challenge’s

Tasks: Move with: three feet touching the ground with hands on ankles Five body parts on the ground Some body parts at a medium level and some parts at a low level, All players on their side and connected to each other One person at a low level and two persons at a high level All players making a round and low shape, Lots of noise without using feet or mouths, All backs touching and very fast, Body parts being used so the group looks like a spider

TAKETAK TIE

Equipment: one hula hoop for each student

Concepts: Cooperation, awareness

Objective: To spin a hoop so it falls on the ground at the same time as our partner’s hoop.

Task: Pairs of students, each with a hoop, try to spin hoops with the same speed and force so the hoops fall on the ground and stop at the same time.

TELEPHONE NUMBER DANCE

Equipment: none

Concepts: Cooperation, communication, creativity

Objective: To create a group dance based on a seven-digit telephone number.

Task: Students are divided into groups of 14 or 7 and given a 7 digit telephone number. Each pair of students within each group receives a telephone number digit and is responsible for creating movement to represent this digit. For example, 3 might be three arm circles. Each pair of students teaches its number movement to the rest of the group. After each group practice performing all seven-movements in sequence, they perform their dance for the rest of the class, and the class tries to guess the telephone number.

KNOTS

Equipment: none

Concept: cooperation

Objective: To form a knot by holding hands in a group and untie it

Task: To form the knot, stand in a circle, shoulder-to-shoulder, and place your hands in the center. Now everybody grab a couple of hands. Do not hold hands of the person standing next to you or the same hands of one person. Now untie it. You may have a leader point to one at a time to do something to untie or just do it as a group.

RED HANDED

Equipment: marble or something equally small

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Pass the marble without the “it” knowing who has it.

Task: Form a circle and put the “it” in the middle with their eyes closed. Give someone the marble and they start passing it from person to person. The best method of passing is to hold the marble in one fist, palm down, and drop it into the palm-up hand of the next person. Then s/he passes it from one fist to the other and on. The “it” tries to see who has the marble and taps the fist. If wrong they get to guess again. If right that person becomes the new “it”.

WANDS

Equipment: Pair of 12-48inch wooden dowels or wands for each player

Concepts: rhythm, cooperation

Objective: develop a rhythmic pattern of tapping sticks to a chant or music

Task: Stand in a circle holding the stick vertically in front of you. Establish a rhythm and begin adding variations. Maintaining the rhythm, click your two sticks together every few beats. Then, between touching them to the ground, click one or both of them against your partner’s sticks or your neighbors’ on either side. Try various combinations of all these. You may begin tossing sticks through the air to each other in time with the rhythm.

CATERPILLAR

Equipment: none

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: to roll over bodies lying side by side and move as a group to a designated spot

Task: Everyone lies on their stomachs, side-by-side. Make sure you’re packed really closely together. Now have the person on the end roll over onto her/his neighbor and keep rolling down the road of bodies. When s/he gets to the end of the line, s/he lies on her/his stomach, and the next person at the other end starts rolling.

 

THE REVERSING PYRAMID

Equipment: none

Concepts: Cooperation

Objective: reverse the pyramid by moving only three people

Task: Divide your class into groups of 10 and ask those 10 people to arrange themselves into a 4-3-2-1 standing pyramid, like this Once pyramid ally arranged, ask that symmetrical group of 10 to reverse the apex and base of the pyramid (triangle) by moving only three people.

GIMME A LEG TO STAND ON

Equipment: mats and spotters

Concept: cooperation

Objective: See how many anatomical contact points are necessary to support a group of 10-12 people off the floor.

Task: Get a group of 10-12 people on a mat and tell them to have as few as possible body parts touching the ground.

EVERYBODY UP

Equipment: none

Concept: cooperation

Objective: to gradually keep adding people to the group so that while holding hands, feet touching, starting in a seated position to stand upright together

Task: Start with two people facing one another so that the bottoms of their feet are opposed, knees bent, and grasping each other’s hands. From this position try to pull up to a standing position. Ask someone to join and keep doing it. To be successful you must: have hands grasped, feet in contact, and all buttocks are off the ground at about the same time.

POPSICLE PUSH-UPS

Equipment: none

Concepts: arm strength, cooperation

Objective: Try to get your entire group supported off the ground with only the participant’s hands touching the ground- hands only.

Task: You may just say the above directions or demonstrate having one person lie down on the ground as it to do a push-up. The second person lies face down, perpendicular to the first person, so that the tops of his/her feet are on top of the first person’s lower back. Each person does the same. On a signal, everyone does a push-up and, if done together, there will be four raised bodies, with only eight hands touching the ground.

HULA HOOP PASS

Equipment: Hula hoop attached to stances or poles of some kind or suspended from basketball goal

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: get everyone through the hoop without touching the hoop

Task: Having mats under you for protection, try to get the entire group through the hoop without touching it.

FLYING HOOP JUMP

Equipment: Climbing rope, 5 hoops, box or pile of mats 2-3 feet high

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: for all of the students to get into the hoops without stepping out or falling

Tasks: Have the group stand on a box or mats. A climbing rope is within grasping reach. Five hoops are placed 3-4 feet in front of the mat. The object is for all of the students to get into the hoops without stepping out or falling. Once they accomplish this, remove a hoop.

CONE TOWER

Equipment: Box of ice cream cones, or cardboard cones or cups, ball, ruler

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Have the team create a tower as high as they can that will still allow a ball to pass underneath

Task: Using the cones or cups build a tower as high as you can but still allow a ball to pass underneath. Measure it with the ruler to see who has the highest.

RIVER CROSSING

Equipment: 2 scooters, rope, 2 rubber rings

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: team to cross the area without touching the floor

Task: Give the students the scooters and rope and rings and have them transport themselves across the river without touching the floor. If they do they have to go back.

CIRCLE SIT

Equipment: none

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: To have everyone sitting on each other’s laps in a circle

Task: Have the students get in a circle all facing one direction. The object is for everyone to sit on the person’s lap behind them without the group falling. It works if everyone sits down at the same time, but that’s the part they need to figure out for themselves. Once they have figured out how to do it, you can see how long they can hold themselves there without falling, each time trying to beat their own time.

HUMAN LADDER

Equipment: one dowel rod for every 2 students. Dowel rods should be approximately 18 long and * -1 in diameter.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: One will attempt to walk across the ladder held by their teammates

Task: Students should find a partner. Have each partner group hold a dowel rod between them at about waist high level. Each partner group should face each other

and stand shoulder to shoulder with another partner group. You can split the class up into small partner groups (3-5) or group the entire class together. The formation will appear as a ladder with students being the rails, and the dowel rods being the rungs. One student will then attempt to walk across the ladder.  The walker should be instructed not to stay on any one rung for a long amount of time, but the walker also should not run. One variation on this is to have the pairs at the beginning of the ladder move to the end of the ladder as soon as their rung has been walked. This will make a never-ending ladder. Use mats and spotters.

TARANTULA CHALLENGE

Equipment: Clothesline, two volleyball standards and wall rings, mats

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: To travel through the web without waking the tarantulas

Task: The 3D spider web is made of clothes line, two volleyball standards and the wall rings attached to the wall. The two standards were approximately 5 feet apart and 6 feet from the wall. Attach the rope to the rings on the wall initially then out to each standard. The web is obviously in a triangular formation which gives it the 3D effect. Place mats on the floor and hang spiders from the web using fishing line. Every member of the group has to travel through a 3 dimensional spider web without waking the sleeping tarantulas. All members must successfully cross through in order to complete the task. If any person wakes the spider, the whole group must start over.

WHITE WATER RAFTING

Equipment: trapezoid (or folded mat), 2 pillow polo sticks (or plungers), 30 white wiffle balls (or any small ball)

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: To travel across the white water without tipping over or touching the floor

Task: The water is rougher than a normal river. Your group has to travel on the raft (mat), using oars (plungers or polo sticks), on the white water (balls) underneath the raft. The key is keeping the balls underneath the raft at all times. As the balls roll out the back, they need to be gathered and passed to the front of the raft.

TUG OF PEACE

Equipment: tug-of-war rope

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: All holding the rope, two teams facing each other, and balanced

Task: Two teams are arranged as if they are going to play tug-of-war, but they try to achieve a static balance with the rope instead. All players try to lean back far enough so that they are out of balance, but the two teams stay balanced.

COMET CHASE

Equipment: Cage ball

Concept: Cooperation and teamwork

Objective: Avoid being touched by the cage ball

Task: The players are divided into two teams with one team having two-thirds of the players. The team with two-thirds of the players evenly spreads apart (5-7 feet) forming a large circle. The team with one-third of the players forms a smaller inner circle spaced approximately 4 feet away from the outer larger circle. The cage ball is approximately 4 feet away from the outer larger circle. The cage ball is placed in the Comet’s Path . A player is selected and placed approximately 8-10 feet in front of the cage ball. On the teacher’s command, the player begins running and the rest of the players start moving the cage ball and try to catch the running player.

SUGGESTIONS: Rotate the players from the inside circle to the outside circle. Rotate runners. Reverse the game by having the runner attempt to catch the cage ball. Have the students try the game in a kneeling position.

SECRET HANDSHAKE

Equipment: A small container with about 20 to 40 cards, each with a body-part word or action written on it, one word or phrase per card (examples: nose,

elbow, twirl, knees, shout, jump, clap, skip, crab walk, karate kick, hip, jog, hands, etc.)

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Come up with their own personalized Secret Handshake using the three actions or body parts

Task: Have one child in the class reach into the small container containing the different phrases or words. The child pulls out three cards to be included in the Secret Handshake. The activity cards have one body part or motion on them. For instance, one card might say hands, and another crab walk, and another karate kick. The students are then paired up and given a few minutes to come up with their own personalized Secret Handshake using the three actions or body parts-put into any order—which were chosen at the beginning of the activity. The partners should be able to repeat their handshake at least three times with it looking the same each time. At the end of a few minutes, have half of the class show off their handshake to the other half, then repeat so all students have had the chance to show their handshake.

THROW AND GO

Equipment: Hula hoop per set of students, a different throwing object in each hoop (es. Nerf balls, tennis balls, foam dice, deck rings, footballs, bean bags, etc.)

Concept: Cooperation, throwing and catching, teamwork

Objective: Throw and catch with a partner

Task: Line the hula hoops in a straight line with 1 throwing object in each hoop. Have students get back-to-back with a partner, then get on each side of the hoops.

On Go students throw object back and forth to each other until the whistle (or music stops). On the whistle, each set shifts to the left leaving the last set on the left to run to the first hoop which is now empty. If the running set of partners gets to the first hoop and all the throwing objects are in their respective hoop before 10 seconds the class gets a point, if not the teacher gets the point.

DON'T TOUCH ME

Equipment: Eight inch spot for 5-16 people, or a cone for 18-26 people, or a hula hoop for larger groups, stopwatch

Concept: Cooperation and communication

Objective: For everyone to touch the object in the middle and switch places with his partner as fast as possible without touching anyone.

Task: Place the spot, cone, or hoop on the ground in the center of the circle of people. Pick a partner from across the circle. Each person should have his/her own partner. The object of this game is for everyone to touch the spot and switch places with their partner as quickly as possible without touching anyone in the process. While you are in motion, say Don’t touch me! like you mean it until you have reached your partner’s position. Time the overall time it takes the group to accomplish the task. Each time someone touches someone else, one second is added to the group’s overall time.

Variation: round one as in above,.

Round two: each person finds another spot across the circle, once found look down at the floor, repeat the crossing without a touch and without looking up.

Round three: each person finds another spot, they also pick someone standing across from them, this time when they cross they need to walk up to their selected person and greet them, don’t touch anyone else.

Round four: place a hula hoop or small circle on the ground in the center of the circled group. Round four is timed. Each person finds a spot across the circle.

This time on the signal the group must switch sides without touching and each person must step in the hula hoop as they cross. There is a five second penalty for each touch. After the group has tried once, determine their first try time. Allow the group time to problem solve and come up with their plan to better their time.

ANOTHER SUGGESTED ROUND: have the participants pick a spot, put their hands up in front of them for bumpers and then close their eyes. Try to cross without any touches. Allow the group to problem solve and come up with a plan.

KNOT

Equipment: Ten foot rope, 30-50 foot rope which is a different type from the 10 foot rope

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Team ties an overhand knot at the secured end of a long rope without touching the secured end.

Task: Tie the two ropes securely together to make a longer rope. Tie the other end of the shorter rope to a stationary object such as a column, doorway or post. Start the activity asking, How many people know how to tie a simple overhand knot? Ask everyone in the group to line up and grab the long rope with one hand.  No one should be holding the shorter rope that is attached to the longer rope and secured at the end. The goal of the group is to tie a simple overhand knot in the short rope without touching the short rope in the process. The leader should be able to easily identify the knot when you are done. Everyone can slide along the long rope, but cannot let go of it or trade places with anyone in the line. The short rope cannot be touched. The long and short ropes cannot be untied.

One solution strategy: The whole team should slide toward the loose end of the long rope to create some unoccupied space on the long rope. The person closest to the short and long rope connection forms a loop in the excess long rope and steps through the loop. The rest of the group will also have to step through he loop just like the first person. When everyone is through, the team should have a loosely tied overhand knot. The team can maneuver the loose knot toward the short rope and pull it tight in the short rope with a little work. Most teams seem to send the person at the loose end of the long rope around the group to form the knot. That strategy will work, but may be more confusing.

FING FONG FOOEY

Equipment: none

Concept: Math skills

Objective: Creates a way for a group to decide who will do or get something.

Task: The activity starts off like the Rock, Paper, Scissors game except that each person will hold out 1,2,or 3 fingers after the count. With everyone in a circle, count off (fists striding open hands) fing, fong, fooey and end with everyone’s fingers pointing showing their choice of 1,2,or 3. Add the number of fingers exposed. Then, starting with yourself, count each person around the circle until you reach the total number fingers counted. The last person counted is it. For example: You have five people in a group and all together you say fing, fong, fooey. Add the number of fingers showing (let’s say it’s 10) then count each person around the circle until you reach 10. In this case, the person right next to you is it .

GIANT TEXAS LIZARD EGG

Equipment: 1 bowling ball, at least one 3-6 foot rope per participant, milk crate or canvass bag.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Move a bowling ball across the floor and into a basket using ropes.

Task: You have found yourselves in the middle of a crisis. An egg from a giant Texas lizard has rolled from its nest and needs to be replaced before the mother returns. Unfortunately, the shell of the lizard egg has properties of the adult lizard’s tail: it emits a sweet odor but is highly toxic. Fortunately for you, a game warden has left some specially treated ropes nearby for just such an incident. The ropes have been treated with radiation to eliminate the possibility of a premature hatching. The radiation is at tolerable levels, however, over-exposure causes instant and terrible side effects such as blindness, muteness, or confusion. Over-exposure occurs when a person touches his own rope with more than one hand. Somehow you must discover a way to move the egg, without breaking it, back into its nest before the mother returns. Be sure not to contact the egg with anything but the treated ropes. Don’t over-expose yourselves…. And don’t even try moving that nest. Giant Texas lizards are especially sensitive to movement of their nests.

RADIATION CONTAMINATED MATERIAL

Equipment: Strings, large elastic band, pin or styrofoam cylinder, crate or box

Concept: Cooperation and communication

Objective: Move the contaminated material to the box without touching it and only using the string and elastic band

Task: Get 8 people and have 4 hold the strings, while facing each other, equally distanced from each other. The stings are attached to and elastic band. The four that are holding the strings should close their eyes or have blindfolds. The other 4 get a partner of the string holders and act as their eyes. The pin is in the middle of the 4 people with the strings. Pull on the strings and the elastic will open so you can put it over the pin and pick it up to bring it to the box. Each non-blindfolded person is telling their partner how much to pull and which way to go.

GUTTERBALL

Equipment: I inexpensive quarter-round sticks (the wooden or plastic trim sticks that are used to cover the edges of wall corners). Any hardware store will have a selection. Buy the cheapest the store has. The simulated wood is best because it bends instead of breaking. A steel ball, or marble and a stop watch.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Roll a ball from person to person as quickly as possible without dropping it.

Task: Everyone stands in a circle, and has a gutter. (You can pair up and share a gutter.) Use the gutters you have to transport this ball from the first person to the next all the way around and then back to the first person. Now that you have the feel for the task, try to send the ball through the process as fast as you can, beginning and ending on the first person’s gutter. This time there will be a few constraints for solving the problem. No one’s gutter can be skipped. Gutters cannot touch each other. Gutter per person method-your own pinkies must be touching each other all the time. Gutter per pair method- Each person must choose one end of the gutter to hold and hold it within three inches of the end. People cannot touch the ball as it travels from beginning, through the process and back to the beginning. If the ball falls from a gutter, the process must be restarted.

THE HOUSE

Equipment: one 30-40 foot rope. A retired climbing rope works well.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Use a rope to form a house.

Task: Ask the group to pick up the rope. Tell them they can slide their hands along the rope, but they can’t let go and /or trade places in the line. Their task is to form a house or an envelope, whichever they prefer, without the rope doubling back on itself. You may need to provide a sketch of the end product for them to see.

(Page 79, Zircon Gorilla)

PHOTO FINISH

Equipment: rope for start or finish line (optional), Polaroid camera (optional)

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Everyone on a team crosses a finish line at exactly the same time.

Task: Everyone must start behind he starting line and go toward the finish line and cross the finish line at exactly the same time. If someone finishes before or after anyone else, the whole team tries again from behind the starting line. The team has an unlimited number of tries.

PLASTIC WRAP

Equipment: a roll of very inexpensive plastic wrap cut to four inches wide.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: A group moves from one side of a room to another as fast as they can as a unit wrapped by plastic wrap.

Task: The group gathers in a tight clump, shoulder to shoulder. Take the four inch wide roll of plastic wrap and begin wrapping it around the whole group at about waist height. Make about 5 rounds while emphasizing to the group that they should not break the band holding them together and they should not take it off the group. Once they are wrapped up, ask them how fast they think they can get from one side of the room and touch the other side of the room. When they have guessed, time their travel and celebrate the effort regardless. Ask them if they could travel the same distance in a shorter time. Yes is almost always immediately the reply. Time them again when they have problem solved enough. Ask everyone to move to the center of the room and back away from the center of the circle until the band breaks or they just can’t move back anymore. When you use good stretchy plastic wrap, the circle often stretches 30 feet in diameter or more and people see that they just had to stretch their boundaries to accomplish their goal.

PORTABLE ZIG-ZAG

Equipment: three portable zigzag boards, at least fourteen 8 * inch rubber or carpet spots. Each of the three zig zag boards consists of a long 2x 4 board, two eight-inch 2x4 boards, two eight inch in diameter circular boards, and a four-inch 2x4 and with a four-inch piece of board from the same type of wood as the circles. All the pieces are fastened together with dry wall screws. Each long 2x4 board is a different length.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Team uses the zig-zag boards to travel from point A to point B on the spots without touching the ground.

Task: Place spots on the floor at intervals that will exactly match your beams. A bit of masking tape under each spot will help it stay in place. The spots will be placed in pairs, side-by-side, except for the single spot at the beginning and the end. A pattern of long-short-medium-long-medium-short-medium (14 spots) works well in most spaces and gives the activity a variety of dynamics such as planning, space issues, individualism vs teamwork, etc. Feel free to place the spots around corners to increase the communication difficulty and make the end of the journey a surprise. The team members cannot touch the ground and the teams cannot touch the ground. The spots protect the beam pads from the ground, but the stationery spots cannot be touched by the participants. Spots cannot be moved. The whole team must cross from here to there maintaining physical contact the whole way.

THE STAR

Equipment: 40-50 foot rope tied to itself to form a large circle

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: The whole group creates a five pointed star (the kind that crisscrosses in the middle) with a circle of rope.

Task: Everyone in the group grabs the rope and gets into a circle. Inform everyone that they cannot let go of the rope or trade places with the people next to them to accomplish this challenging task (although they can slide along the rope). The goal of this activity is for the whole group to create a five pointed star with the rope (the kind that crisscrosses in the middle). Once they think the task is complete, ask them to slowly lower the star to the ground and step back to admire their work.

BARN YARD

Equipment: none (blindfolds)

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: The participants are asked to form their animal groups without talking

Task: A great activity to form small groups (stress safety). Each participant is privately assigned an animal, if four groups are needed * of the group would be assigned dog, * of the group cow, * frog and * cat. Once all have been assigned an animal the group is blindfolded or asked to close their eyes, hands up for bumpers. The participants are asked to form their animal groups without talking, they can only make the proper animal noise to locate the others in their group.

DIMINISHING LOAD PROBLEM

Equipment: none

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: To get all participants across this void

Task: A line is drawn as a boundary or start in front of the group. A second line is drawn 15-20 yards away, the finish. Each line goes on for infinity therefore it is impossible to go around the void between the start and finish . The object is to get all participants across this void. Anyone that touches the ground must return to the start. The only person to walk across and stay is the last. Do this in the least amount of trips.

FOUR QUAD (FORK WAD)

Equipment: two ropes (stretch cord works well), enough colored balls so that each participant will have two and the balls will be of four different colors

(colored paper rolled into balls and taped will do), bag, stop watch

Concept: Cooperation, tossing and catching skills

Objective: See how long it takes the group to separate the balls by color into the four grids.

Task: Split the group into four equal subgroups. Each group is assigned a square, the squares are arranged similar to a four square court with no outside boundaries.  Four volunteers hold up two ropes tightly separating the four groups approximately chin height. Each participant is asked to take two balls out of a bag without regard for the color.

The problem: on the instructors signal the objective is to see how long it takes the group to separate the balls by color into the four grids. The rules: the balls must be exchanged by a toss over the dividing line, the balls may only be held by the hands (no underarm stuffing), each dropped ball is a five second penalty and remains on the ground for a final count, each touch of the dividing line is a ten second penalty.

READY AIM FIRE

Equipment: two soft balls (nerf balls, rolled paper balls, sock balls) per pair, pins

Concept: Cooperation, communication, tossing

Objective: Knock down all the pins

Task: Have the group get into pairs which ever way you prefer. Designate one partner as the launcher and one as the weapons guidance system. The launcher is equipped with two soft objects. The launcher is also blind folded )or eyes closed). On the signal, the weapons guidance directs their launcher into position to fire on any pin. Once the launcher has been readied and aimed the guidance announces fire and a missile is launched. Once the launcher has fired both missiles the guidance system must direct their launcher to retrieve any discarded missiles and continue to launch.

Rules: each launch must be from the chest out, no over arm throws, the guidance system may not touch the launcher or the missiles. After the allotted time cease fire and compare pins. Switch roles and play again.

NUCLEAR TRANSFER

Equipment: Frisbee or disc with 10-15 eight foot ropes connected around its rim, a 2 liter soda bottle and a start and finish area designated

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: to lift the bottle (nuclear safe area) with the disc using only the ropes and transfer it to the finish area (nuclear safe area).

Task: 8 students hold onto the ends of the ropes and attempt to transfer the bottle to the finish line. If the bottle falls the group starts again.

BIG TURTLE

Equipment: 1 mat per group

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: To walk on hands and knees together with the turtle shell on your backs

Task: A group of about 7 or8 children get on their hands and knees under a large turtle shell and try to make the turtle move in one direction. Younger kids lay down

first and need to be given extra directions about working together. The older ones can try to get the turtle to go over a mountain (bench) or through an obstacle

course without losing the shell.

BIG SNAKE

Equipment: none

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Get the snake to be connected to everyone in the class, roll over and curl up and sleep

Task: The children start by stretching out on their stomachs and holding the ankles of the person in front of them to make a two-people snake that slithers across the floor on its belly. They soon connect up for a four-people snake, and eight-people snake, and so on, until the whole group is on Big Snake. At various lengths, the children like to see if they can turn the whole snake over on its back without its coming apart. The snake can also go over mountains, through holes, or up trees, or may curl up and go to sleep. I takes a coordinated snake to do these last two feats.

CATERPILLAR OVER THE MOUNTAIN

Equipment: mat, bench

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: To crawl on hands and knees while holding the ankles of those in front of you and crawl over the mountain

Task: First the children work together either to construct a mountain or to move it into place. The mountain can consist of a bench, large play blocks, or anything else that appeals to them. Once the children have helped move the mountain they again work together to put the grass on top of the mountain. A mat draped over the mountain makes good grass. To form the caterpillar, the children line up on their hands and knees, and hold the ankles of the child in front of them. Four children can form one sixteen-legged caterpillar, which moves around the room and over the mountain. Caterpillars can link up with other caterpillars until one giant caterpillar is formed, which crawls over the mountain and slides down the other side. A whole-class caterpillar may need more than one mountain to crawl over. Caterpillars can also coil up or crawl into a cocoon.

THE ROCK

Equipment: 13 inch tire or a heavy-duty box, several mats

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Get the entire group on the rock (or off the floor) for a slow count of five.

Task: All group members must balance on the rock (or be off the floor) for a slow count of five. The group needs to find a way to help each other maintain balance; that could mean group members will experience close encounters with one another. Place the rock in the middle of the mat away from walls. All group members must be off the floor (mat) and on the rock. All group members do not have to be touching the rock as long as they are off the floor. Once you have been on the rock, touching the floor (or mat) for even an instant means the group must start over with no one on the rock. No last names or put-down may be used.

THE SNAKE

Equipment: a tug-of-war rope

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: The group members create the shape with the rope and they must cover the rope with their bodies.

Task: The group is given a list of shapes such as numbers, letters, names, words, or designs. The challenge is mastered when the group completes the number of shapes assigned. Make the shape using a tug-of-war rope. All group members bust lie on the rope. The tug-of-war rope must be completely covered by group members. The group must have each shape approved by the teacher before beginning another shape. No last names or put-downs. *CJ two sections. You must go back if a rule is broken.

THE POWER LINE

Equipment: Horizontal bar set not higher than the tallest group member. (The bar can be half of an even or uneven parallel bar system or a rope strung between

two standards.) mats, large crash mat for landing, 8-foot two-by-four board.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Group members try to cross over a horizontal bar while standing on a board lifted by group members

Task: No group member may touch the Power Line. The board may not touch the Power Line. Group members who have crossed over the Power Line may not touch the floor on the beginning side of the Power Line nor reach under the bar to assist a teammate. All group members must remain on the floor mats except when going over the Power Line. If any rule is broken, the person making the mistake and one who has crossed the bar must return to the starting line

THE ELECTRIC FENCE

Equipment: High balance beam, mats, net and two standards or poles

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: All group members must successfully cross under the fence and stand on the exit ma on the beam.

Task: The students must begin the task by getting on top of the balance beam. The students, may not touch the floor or mats between the entry and exit mats. Group members must go under the net without touching it. The students must get back on the topside of the beam before getting off the beam. Once a student gets off the beam and onto the exit mat s/he may not get back onto the beam. Only people on the beam may help group members hanging under the beam. Any broken rule requires the person making the mistake and one who has crossed the beam to start over.

THE GRAND CANYON

Equipment: Climbing rope, vaulting box (or four folded mats stacked upon one another), and mats placed around for safety

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: All group members cross the Grand Canyon and are standing on the opposite canyon rim.

Task: The Grand Canyon is the area between the starting line and the vaulting box. If any member of the group touches the floor anywhere in the Grand Canyon, a student who has successful crossed the canyon and the person who touched the floor must start over. If a group member falls or jumps off the vaulting box, that person and one other person must start over. The students swing over the Grand Canyon and onto the vaulting box. The group needs to help one another get onto both the rope and the vaulting box.

THE WHOLE WORLD IN THEIR HANDS

Equipment: cage ball, two tires or hula hoops

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: Move the cage ball from one tire to the other without touching it with hands or arms and the ball not touching the floor

Task: Choose an open working space. Group members start by sitting around the cage ball in a crab walk position. The may sit on the floor. During the challenge, they may move to other positions. The cage ball cannot touch the floor. The cage ball cannot touch the hands or arms of any group member. If a rule is broken, the ball must be returned to tire 1 and the group must begin the task again. No last names or put downs.

THE WALL

Equipment: Large folding 12" landing mat standing on end and mats to lay under the12" landing mat.

Concept: Cooperation

Objective: The entire group has to cross over the wall

Task: The12" landing mat may not fall over. Students may not grasp crash pad handles or ropes holding the crash mat together. Students may not step over the line dividing the mats

 

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